Neha Patil (Editor)

Monic languages

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Geographic distribution:
  
Indochina

Proto-language:
  
Old Mon

Glottolog:
  
moni1258

Linguistic classification:
  
Austroasiatic Monic

Subdivisions:
  
Mon Nyah Kur

The Monic languages are a branch of the Austroasiatic language family descended from the Old Monic language of the kingdom of Dvaravati in what is now central Thailand. The Nyahkur people continue directly from that kingdom, whereas the Mon are descendants of those who migrated to Pegu after the 11th century Khmer conquest of Dvaravati.

Classification

Sidwell (2009:114) proposes the following tree ("stammbaum") for Monic, synthesizing past classifications from Therapan L-Thongkum (1984) and Diffloth (1984).

  • Old Mon / Proto-Monic
  • Nyah Kur
  • North
  • Central
  • South
  • Middle Mon
  • Literary Mon
  • Mon Ro: Northernmost dialect, spoken in the Pegu-Paung-Zingyaik area
  • West Mon Ro variety: Spoken from north of Martaban to Thaton
  • East Mon Ro variety: Spoken in a small area on the south bank of the Gyaing River
  • Mon Rao: Spoken around Moumein, extending several hundred kilometers south to Tavoy
  • North Mon Rao
  • Kamawet area Mon
  • South Mon Rao
  • Ye Mon Rao: This is the southernmost Mon variety.
  • Thai Mon (mix of Mon Ro and Mon Rao)
  • References

    Monic languages Wikipedia